View the H-War Discussion Logs by month
View the Prior Message in H-War's May 2000 logs by: [date] [author] [thread] View the Next Message in H-War's May 2000 logs by: [date] [author] [thread] Visit the H-War home page.
Greetings, H-Warriors: The following guidelines bear repeating on occasion; please consult them when preparing messages for posting. -- H-Net regards all its list messages as a form of publication; because messages are ported to the web, each one stands alone and can be reprinted as a single piece. Prepare messages with that condition in mind. If you have not yet done so, scan the message logs on the web to see how their web image can convey a different impression from the one your mailer presents: http://www.h-net.msu.edu/~war -- Messages must be signed, in the body of the text. Signature can simply be a full name, or it can include institutional information and contact details if you wish. Messages without signatures will be returned with a request for a signature. -- Please refrain from long quotations of other messages in your posting. Refer by author to a message you are replying to, and quote only what you consider pertinent to your message. Readers generally are more interested in your thoughts than in rereading others' in your posting. -- Formatting: plain text; flush left; no attachments; turn off quoted-printable encoding (a toggle usually can be found in the incoming mail settings, format menu, or options menu of your mailer); remove .vcf or PGP verification attachments; put an extra carriage return between paragraphs and break up text for easy viewing on-screen; use quotation marks "" to bracket quotations, not carets (<> can sometimes cause difficulties with webbed messages). -- Style: can vary between the formality of parliamentary debate and the casualness of happy hour. When participating in an exchange of opinion, minimize the thrust-and-parry of quotation-response and avoid the use of the second person; instead, use the third person as if addressing a group. An exception might be a friendly reply to a query ("you can find a good source on Vietcong tactics in...."). If you are in doubt about how a message might be received, get a second opinion from a friend or colleague; there's no Prime Directive to post immediately, and there's every advantage to thoughtful, well-considered submissions. regards Peter Knupfer Temporary H-War Editor peter@mail.h-net.msu.edu
|